Korphe

Korphe
is a small subsistence farming village in northeastern Pakistan, situated at the
foot of the Karakoram mountain range along the banks of the Braldu River.

Korphe has achieved international attention because of the work
carried out by mountaineer Greg Mortenson and his Central Asia Institute (CAI)
which has specialized in raising money from all over the world in order to
provide good quality schooling for the children of Korphe and similar villages
throughout the region, including Afghanistan. How this came to pass has been
extensively documented in the book Three Cups of Tea written by Mortenson and
journalist David Oliver Relin and the Young Readers edition of Three Cups of Tea
adapted by Sarah Thomson.

Three Cups of Tea is a New York Times bestselling book by Greg
Mortenson and David Oliver Relin published by Penguin in 2006. The book
describes Mortenson's transition from a mountain-climber to a humanitarian
committed to reducing poverty and educating girls in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
He did this by co-founding the Central Asia Institute, which has built over 131
schools in the most remote areas of the countries, educating over 58,000
students.

The book's title comes from a Balti proverb: "The first time you
share tea with a Balti, you are a stranger. The second time you take tea, you
are an honored guest. The third time you share a cup of tea, you become family

In
1993, Greg Mortenson attempted to climb K2, the world's second highest mountain,
in the Karakoram range of northern Pakistan, as a way of honoring the memory of
his deceased sister Christa. He was planning to lay her beautiful amber necklace
on the summit of K2.[5] After more than 70 days on the mountain, Greg and three
other climbers had their ascent interrupted by the need to complete a 75-hour
life-saving rescue of a fifth climber. After getting lost during his descent, he
became weak and exhausted, and by chance alone, instead of arriving in Askole,
where his porters awaited, he came across Korphe, a small village built on a
shelf jutting out from a canyon. He was greeted and taken in by the chief elder
of Korphe, Haji Ali.

To repay the remote community for its hospitality, Mortenson
promised to build a school for the village. After difficulties in raising
capital, Mortenson was introduced to Jean Hoerni, a Silicon Valley pioneer who
donated the money that Mortenson needed for his school. In the last months of
Hoerni's life (Hoerni was dying from leukemia), he co-founded the Central Asia
Institute, endowing the CAI to build schools in rural Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Mortenson faced many daunting challenges in his quest to raise
funds for the building of more than 55 schools in Taliban territory, including
death threats from Islamic mullahs, long periods of separation from his family,
and being kidnapped by Taliban sympathizers.

Reflecting on the state of the post-9/11 world, Mortenson argues
that extremism in the region can be deterred through collaborative efforts to
alleviate poverty and improve access to education, especially for girls.
Formerly, schooling focused on the boys, but educated boys tend to move to the
cities to find jobs, and seldom return. By contrast, educated girls tend to
remain in the community and pass their enhanced knowledge to the next
generation. Thus, Mortenson suggests, educating girls has more of a lasting
benefit for the community.